African American
Master Artists-in-Residency Program
In 1974, Northeastern offered
studio space and a teaching position to well-known African American
artist, Dana Chandler. Chandler used the studio for meetings and permitted
other African American artists to use it. Chandler became the first
African American artist to display work in Northeastern’s Art
Gallery, which was founded in 1975 with a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation. Chandler’s 1976 exhibit was titled, “If the
Shoe Fits, Hear It!”

Dana Chandler
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The university established
the African American Master Artists-in Residency Program (AAMARP) in
1977 with Chandler as its director. AAMARP’s mission was to provide
awareness of the talent of African American artists and also those from
other ethnicities. The program allowed budding African American artists
to create works of art with unrestricted freedom. Northeastern was the
first university in the country to provide an in-residence program to
African American artists. The program became a success and renowned
within the Boston community.
On October 4, 1977, the
debut exhibition of the AAMARP was sponsored by the Mayor’s Office
of Cultural Affairs and held at City Hall’s Main Gallery. In its
first year, the program welcomed approximately 3,000 visitors, including
children from local public schools who created their own art at the
studio. AAMARP also helped sponsor exhibitions of the works of individual
artists, including Arnold Hurley (painter schooled at Tufts University,
where he received his MFA at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston), Milton Derr (figurative painter and draftsman who has taught
at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Tufts University for 30
years), and Rudy Robinson (photographer).
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